
Vindou Duc believes that to embrace coachability – a readiness to be coached – is to embrace “the boundless possibilities of our own evolution”.
A human resources professional for more than two decades, Duc has held leadership roles at numerous organizations, including General Mills International, PwC, and Novartis. She experienced being a coachee for the first time on IMD’s Strategies for Leadership (SL) in 2015, after a friend recommended the program.
As an HR director, coaching and mentoring employees was part of her work, she had taken several online courses to develop her skills. She had also coached clients through The Nextep, the business transformation consultancy she founded in 2008. But the coaching she received on Strategies for Leadership was an eye-opener.
“We had a lot of group coaching over the four days, so we got to know each other very well and opened up to each other, sharing our vulnerabilities and weaknesses,” said Duc. “For me, it was something new. It was a very powerful experience to allow myself to show my vulnerability and feel safe.” She realized that by showing her vulnerability, she made other people feel comfortable to reach out to her. “The image of myself that I was projecting changed,” she said. “I was warmer, more open.”
The program gave Duc the confidence to be herself. Looking back, she says she was “blessed” to have had Susan Goldsworthy, Affiliate Professor of Leadership, Communications, and Organizational Change at IMD, as her coach.
“A good coach is someone who can really take you to the next level, and Susan did that very successfully,” she said. “The person I am on the journey of becoming is in great part thanks to her.”